The number of pupils in England off school without permission increased ahead of the Christmas holidays, figures suggest.
Data from the Department for Education (DfE) shows that the unauthorised absence rate across state schools in England was 3.4% in the week ending December 20 – which was the last week of term.
This was higher than at the start of the term – the week ending September 13 – when the rate was 1.9%, and higher than before the half-term – the week ending October 25 – when it was 2.4%, according to the DfE figures.
It comes as parents in England face higher fines if they take their children out of class without permission this academic year as part of a Government drive to boost school attendance since the Covid-19 pandemic.
The latest data also shows that the overall absence rate – authorised and unauthorised – was 9.5% in the week ending December 20, which was “the highest absence rate” of the autumn term in 2024.
The absence rate varied across the last week of term – with a low of 8.5% on Tuesday and a peak of 12.9% on Friday.
Most of the rise in absences towards the end of term was “driven by illness”, the DfE said.
The figures are difficult to compare with the equivalent period the year before as there is only national attendance data available for the week ending December 15 in 2023, which was not the last week of term for many pupils.
But the DfE said the increase in absence between the October half-term and the end of the autumn term was “in line with patterns seen during 2023/24”.
The figures come after school absence fines have increased from £60 to £80, and a parent who receives a second fine for the same child within a three-year period will automatically receive a £160 fine.
Under new national rules, all schools are required to consider a fine when a child has missed 10 or more sessions (five days) for unauthorised reasons.
The DfE has said other actions, such as a parenting order or prosecution, will be considered if a parent exceeds two fines per child within a three-year period, and those who are prosecuted could receive a fine of up to £2,500.
Paul Whiteman, general secretary at school leaders’ union the NAHT, said it was “encouraging” that attendance figures across the autumn term appear to have moved “in the right direction” compared with a similar period in 2023.
He said: “However, there is still a long way to go, and schools are continuing to work incredibly hard to increase attendance, including by tackling unauthorised absence.
“Many of the causes of absence lie beyond the school gates, though, and have their roots in social challenges facing families, poverty, and issues like physical and mental health, which fines for parents do nothing to address.
“Measures announced in the new Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, such as free breakfast clubs and a register of children not in school, will help – but we also need the Government to reinvest in crucial services which support families and schools and have faced huge cuts under previous administrations.”